Macron pledges to tackle 'doubts and divisions' after election win
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[April 25, 2022]
By JEEVAN RAVINDRAN and Ingrid Melander
PARIS (Reuters) -Emmanuel Macron pledged to
address deep divisions within France as results showed a clear
presidential election win over Marine Le Pen, acknowledging that many
had voted for him mainly to thwart his far-right challenger.
With all eyes turned towards a parliamentary election in June, he must
now negotiate another tricky period of campaigning to try to ensure a
legislature that will give him the majority he will need to implement
his policies.
Final results of Sunday's runoff showed Macron won 58.54% of the vote, a
result line with late polling but a higher margin of victory than many
earlier surveys had predicted.
The result also give the far right its biggest share of the pesidential
ballot on record.
"Many in this country voted for me not because they support my ideas but
to keep out those of the far-right. I want to thank them and know I owe
them a debt in the years to come," Macron said in a late-night victory
speech.
"We will have to be benevolent and respectful because our country is
riddled with so many doubts, so many divisions."
While Macron's margin of victory was comfortable, it was well below the
66.1% he scored against the same opponent in their first runoff in 2017,
and even further from the 82% secured by conservative Jacques Chirac in
2002 when the far-right first made it to the runoff round.
Hard-left presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon - who came a close
third behind Le Pen in the first round - immediately labelled the June
12 and June 19 parliamentary elections a "third round" of the
presidential election.
It is a ballot in which opposition parties of all stripes will be hoping
to win.
The conservative daily Le Figaro wrote in its main editorial on Monday:
"In truth, the marble statue is a giant with feet of clay. Emmanuel
Macron knows this well ... he will not benefit from any grace period."
The message across the Macron camp on Monday was that they would listen
more, after a first mandate in which Macron himself initially called his
leadership style "Jupiterian", suggesting he would stay above the
political fray.
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French President Emmanuel Macron gestures as he arrives to deliver a
speech after being re-elected as president, following the results in
the second round of the 2022 French presidential election, during
his victory rally at the Champs de Mars in Paris, France, April 24,
2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
PROTESTS?
"When a proposal that affects the lives of the French comes to the
National Assembly, the deputies must go and discuss it with the
French," parliament leader Richard Ferrand, a close ally of Macron,
told France Inter.
"Otherwise, there is a risk of a divide between parliamentarians and
what the French feel."
Macron can likely expect the protests that have marred some of his
first mandate to come back as he tries to push his business reforms,
including plans to push the retirement age from 62 to 65 years.
"He's not going to do another five years of the same mandate, that's
clear. We won't let him do it," said 63-year-old administrative
worker Colette Sierra.
"If he does, I think people are ready to take to the streets if
there isn’t the right kind of coalition government."
But some voters were genuinely happy with Macron's win.
"I'm very happy about the result because this president has already
steered us through several challenges," said 65-year-old lorry
driver Lucien Sozinho. "He has shown courage, and there you have it,
that's the result."
After a campaign dominated by cost of living issues, Finance
Minister Bruno Le Maire told Franceinfo that price caps on energy
would stay until the end of the year, to ease the surge in energy
prices fuelled by the Ukraine war.
(Reporting by Mnauel Ausloos, Jeevan Ravindran, Myriam Rivet,
Dominique Vidalon and Sudip Kar-Gupta in Paris; Additional reporting
by Alan Charlish in Warsaw; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by
Edmund Blair and John Stonestreet)
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